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Culture:American
Title:cage crinoline; hoop skirt
Type:Clothing
Materials:base metal: steel; textile: linen; black enamel
Place Made:United States
Accession Number:  HD 85.099.1
Credit Line:Gift of Mrs. Margery Howe
Museum Collection:  Historic Deerfield
1985-099-1t.jpg

Description:
Cage crinoline with fourteen hoops with the straps broken or cut off, and missing a buckle and seven tapes out of the waistband. Variously called hoop skirts, skeleton skirts, or skirt improvers, the word crinoline comes from the French word for horse hair. As skirts became increasingly wider in the 1830s and 1840s, more and more petticoats were needed to achieve the fashionable dome shape. One solution was to stiffen petticoats with horsehair and other materials. By the early 1850s, steel was sporadically used in petticoat hems in the United States and abroad. It wasn’t until 1856 that a French patent outlined a system for entire “cages” of flexible steel rods connected by vertical tapes made from linen or cotton. Seen as oppressive today, these devices (averaging one to two pounds) were heralded as a reform in women’s dress. Nevertheless, the lighter weight was tempered by the new problem of correctly walking and sitting in society. Cage crinolines were used and modified extensively into the 1860s and 1870s by women of all classes, until they were replaced by the bustle and more figure-clinging dress styles. Cage crinolines became one of the first mass-manufactured garments for women in the 19th century. The growing steel industry produced the hoops. Vertical tapes were machine-woven in a double weave, creating evenly-spaced channels through which women, employed in factories, inserted the hoops.

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https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=HD+85.099.1

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